User:Roman Spinner/T (disambiguation)

=There Goes the Neighborhood= There Goes the Neighborhood may refer to:

Albums and songs

 * There Goes the Neighborhood (album), fifth studio issue by American rock guitarist/vocalist Joe Walsh; recorded October–November 1980, released March 10, 1981
 * Whoops! There Goes the Neighbourhood, fourth album (1989) by British New Wave band The Blow Monkeys; structured as follow-up to 1987 release She Was Only a Grocer's Daughter
 * "There Goes the Neighborhood" (Body Count song), composition by American heavy metal band, based in Los Angeles; released as track 12 on band's self-titled 1992 album
 * "There Goes the Neighborhood" (Sheryl Crow song), 1998 song by American rock star Sheryl Crow; released as second single from platinum album The Globe Sessions, won Grammy in 2001

Films and television

 * There Goes the Neighborhood (film), American comedy directed in 1992 by Bill Phillips, with stars Jeff Daniels, Catherine O'Hara and Hector Elizondo; also known as Paydirt
 * There Goes the Neighborhood (TV series), American six-week CBS summer program (August–September 2009) in reality TV genre; focused on eight families competing for $250,000
 * "There Goes the Neighborhood" (The Vampire Diaries), April 1, 2010 installment (CW Network, season 1, episode 16) of American horror TV series; directed by Kevin Bray

Other

 * There Goes the Neighbourhood: An Irreverent History of Canada, 1992 book-length collection of satirical cartoons created by Canadian political humorist Adrian Raeside
 * Backyard Wrestling 2: There Goes the Neighborhood, American video game released in 2004, on Xbox and PlayStation 2; designed by Paradox Development and published by Eidos Interactive
 * There Goes the Neighborhood (book), 2006 publication by William Julius Wilson and Richard Taub; investigates racial, ethnic and class tensions in four Chicago neighborhoods on city's south and west side

=Tiger Rose= Tiger Rose may refer to:


 * Tiger Rose (play), American theatrical production written by Willard Mack and produced by David Belasco for star Lenore Ulric; Broadway opening in October 1917 at Lyceum Theatre; closed in September 1918 after 384 performances
 * Tiger Rose (1923 film), American silent feature directed by Sidney Franklin for Warner Bros; based on Willard Mack's 1917–18 Broadway vehicle for Lenore Ulric who reprises her role; Forrest Stanley plays male lead, Devlin
 * Tiger Rose (1929 film), American early sound feature directed by George Fitzmaurice for Warner Bros; based on Willard Mack's play, it stars Lupe Velez in title role, with Monte Blue as Devlin